Skip to content

spacehuhn/wifi_keylogger

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

14 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Wi-Fi Keylogger

(Proof of Concept) Arduino Keylogger with Wi-Fi!

arduino leonardo with usb host shield and a nodemcu

Support me and my projects on Patreon!
Support me on Patreon

Contents

Introduction

Using an Arduino with an ATmega32u4 (which can emulate a keyboard) and a USB host shield, this combination can be used as a keylogger. The addition of an ESP8266 allows you to store and retrieve the keystrokes in a log file.

This is just a proof of concept
Please don't expect this to work with every keyboard layout!
I saw a few forum threads about making a USB keylogger with Arduino using a USB Host shield, but I couldn't find any published project about this.
So I hope this is a good basis for someone who wants to make a proper keylogger, though I won't develop this any further.

Disclaimer

Use it only for testing purposes on your own devices!
I don't take any responsibility for what you do with this project.

Installation

Short version:

Upload the keylogger sketch to your Arduino (ATmega32u4) and upload the esp8266_saveSerial sketch to your ESP8266.
Connect your Arduino with the USB host shield and connect the serial pins (RX and TX (Arduino) to TX and RX (ESP8266)) and GND.


Preparation

What you will need:

I used an Arduino Leonardo with the big host shield.

arduino leonardo with USB host shield and a nodemcu

You could probably build a very small version using the mini host shield and a pro micro.
http://forum.arduino.cc/index.php?topic=325930.0

ESP8266

Open the esp8266_saveSerial sketch with Arduino.
You need to install the following Librarys:

Then compile and upload it to your ESP8266 (check if your settings are right).

Arduino ATmega32u4

You will need the USB Host Shield 2.0 Library.
Open the keylogger sketch in Arduino and upload it to your Arduino.

Wire everything up

Ok so now you need to connect the ESP8266 with the Arduino.
Connect these pins:

Arduino ESP82666
TX RX
RX TX
GND GND
VCC (3.3V) VCC (3.3V)

Note: you'll need a 3.3V regulator if your Arduino only provides 5V.
Don't connect the ESP8266 to 5V!

If you use a plain ESP-12, you also have to set the enable pin and to HIGH and GPIO15 to LOW:

PIN Mode
GPIO15 LOW (GND)
CH_PD (EN) HIGH (3.3V)

How to use it

Plug the leonardo in the computer and the keyboard into the USB host shield. The ESP8266 will create a new access point definitely not a keylogger. Connect to it using the password !keylogger.
Open your browser and go to 192.168.4.1, you will see every keytroke.

screenshot of the webinterface

To clear the logfile go to 192.168.4.1/clear.

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the license file file for details

Sources and additional Links

USB Host shield: https://www.circuitsathome.com/usb-host-shield-hardware-manual/ https://www.arduino.cc/en/Main/ArduinoUSBHostShield

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Other 100.0%